|
|
|
|
|
by pton_xd
145 days ago
|
|
> Studies like this remind me of early concerns about calculators making students "worse at math." The reality is that tools change what skills matter, not whether people think. Over-reliance on calculators does make you worse at math. I (shamefully) skated through Calculus 3 by just typing everything into my TI-89. Now as an adult I have no recollection of anything I did in that class. I don't even remember how to use the TI-89, so it was basically a complete waste of my time. But I still remember the more basic calculus concepts from all the equations I solved by hand in Calc 1 and 2. I'm not saying "calculators bad" but misusing them in the learning process is a risk. |
|
All this is saying that more basic things are easier to remember than more complex things and without further evidence is very very limited in predictive power.